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Teena Rose, CPRW, CEIP, CCM
After working most of your adult life in the same field, there comes a time when two powerful words enter your mind: career change. And for working women considering a midlife transition, there’s a bit of advice Mark Twain left society about 100 years ago: “The secret of success is making your vocation your vacation.” Twain’s remarks are simple and succinct. If taking a chance on another career has become a priority, then it should be a dream job of sorts, or fairly close to it. There are dozens of reasons why people shift gears when it comes to their careers. Some become bored, unfulfilled and lack the motivation they once had in their current job. Others simply feel that there’s some other calling they would like to explore. Unreachable financial goals could be the catalyst for change. Or even the most unpleasant scenario of being fired or laid off. Whatever the reason, this is a time when self-evaluation and proper planning can lead to a rewarding and satisfying new life. In your 40s or 50s, changing course in your livelihood doesn’t work the same as it did earlier in life. Sure, the functional part might be the same, but the psychological component is different for most of us. At the midlife point, most women – and men – recognize that money, success and status are all relative. They typically are pushed to the back burner, while the importance of a meaningful and fulfilling vocation tend to take center stage. This is not to say that climbing the ladder, breaking the glass ceiling and playing the office political games won’t be part of the new job. Success just tends to be defined differently between a 25-year-old college graduate eager to make her mark in the business world and the 45-year-old woman who has gained years of experience and perspective, and now wants a job that’s more appealing. One of the first steps to take is deciding if career change is really what’s necessary. Sometimes employees may assume they’re stuck at their jobs with no hope for the future, thinking that changing careers is the only way out. A proper self-analysis is required because making an effort at changing your current job may be all that you need. But if you’ve determined that you’ve had it with your current career, start preparing yourself for the transition. And preparing is the key word.
Noted career expert Harvey Mackay is the author of two New York Times bestsellers, ‘Swim With the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive” and “Beware the Naked Man Who Offers You His Shirt.” One of Mackay’s common axioms is: “The will to succeed is preceded by the will to prepare.”
©2005 by Teena Rose. All rights reserved.
Teena Rose is a certified and published resume writer and author of The 20-Minute
Cover Letter Fixer and Cracking the Code to Pharmaceutical Sales
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